This would be called phagocytosis. Pseudopodia would extend out from the cell and sorround the large foreign particle, thereby engulfing it in its own membrane. This membrane would break off and re-connect together, leaving the particle in a membrane, able to then have enzymes injected to dissolve it for varoius purposes depending on what it is.
phagocytosis.
but maybe penocytosis?
The process in which a cell engulfs and takes in a large food molecule is called phagocytosis.
phagocytosis
It surrounds the food with pseudopodia.
The plant cell has a vacoule to store water, food, and waste
phagocytosis occurs in our body when some foreign particle enters inside it, our white blood cells engulf it, and then digest it. it is also how some microorganisms like ameoba get their food. example: white blood cell engulfing a large, liquid protein droplet.
Vacoule
I am not sure about, "food particles" per se, however when a cell surounds large particles it is called phagocytosis this should not be confused with pinocytosis, which is intended for small molecules
active transportAmoeba gets the food through the process of endocytosis.it can engulf the food particle from every side of its body(cell) surface by making psuedopodia when it comes in contact with the food particle.
Amoeba has flexible cell membrane. It enables amoeba to engulf in food by the process called endocytosis.
They engulf there food by the process of phagocytosis or picnocytosis. The large food material first broken down by ameoba as it secreate some extracellular enzyme then that food material is taken by amoeaba as amoeba form pseudopodia around the food material and then take it inside the cell.
It surrounds the food with pseudopodia.
Excretion
They use it to engulf or surround their food
By the process of phagocytosis. They use pseudopodia to engulf
a amoeba engulfs it food by endocytosis
The plant cell has a vacoule to store water, food, and waste
They engulf their food. The amoeba's body wraps around the food and it is ingested, then digested.
Engulf: transitive verb 1 : to flow over and enclose : OVERWHELM <the mounting seas threatened to engulf the island> 2 : to take in (food) by or as if by flowing over and enclosing something that surrounds you as if to cover you up
phagocytosis occurs in our body when some foreign particle enters inside it, our white blood cells engulf it, and then digest it. it is also how some microorganisms like ameoba get their food. example: white blood cell engulfing a large, liquid protein droplet.